Corpora and repertoria Athens and Attica

It can be complicated to find your way around
the inscriptions from Attica. You will find here the most important publications (scroll down)

IG SIA ATL AGORA AKROPOLIS KERAMEIKOS ELEUSIS AOL

IG- Inscriptiones Graecae

The Inscriptiones Graecae is the successor to CIG. It aims to collect all inscriptions found in Greece and on the Greek Islands. It was started under the aegis of the Berlin Academy in 1860 and is still ongoing. Previous editors have included A.Kirchhoff, U. von Wilamowitz-Moellendorf. The texts are provided with an editorial text in Latin.

Recently German translations are being made available in an on-line edition that can be found here. An edition in a worldcat library can be found here.

SIA I.(IG I2, II2/III2). Paraleipomena et Addenda.
Ed. Al. N. Oikonomides. SIA I adds to the IG series a large number of
Inscriptions (Ed. R. Wuensch, W. Peek, G. Stamiris) found in Athens and Attica
before 1940, but not included in the IG series, as well as 1133 new
inscriptions, readings, and restorations published between 1941 and 1957

SIA II. (IG I2, II2/III2). Paraleipomena et Addenda. Ed. Al. N. Oikonomides. (1979)
SIA II contains the addenda to I.G. I2 + II/III2 that J.J.E. Hondius published
in his Novae Inscriptiones Atticae and in the first three volumes of
Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum. This volume also includes the lengthy and
Important review-article of I.G. II2, pars prima, Berlin 1913, (Ed. J.
Kirchner) containing the decrees of the years 403/2-230/29, by A. C. Johnson
in Classical Philology

SIA IV.(IG I2, II2/III2). Paraleipomena et Addenda.
Ed. Al. N. Oikonomides. (1984) SIA IV is a volume of material that the majority
of the scholars have not had the opportunity to study for at least half a
century. The Attic vase inscriptions and the Attic graffiti inscriptions have
never been included in the IG and the IG2 series (with the small exception of a
few Ostracism-Ostraca). Includes inscriptions from all the entries on inscribed
vases or vase frag-ments from the work of Graef & Langlots -- Die antiken
Vasen von der Akropolis zu Athen (Berlin 1925-1933) -- (repaginated and in
their original numerical order including in-text drawings) from the volume IV
in the SIA series

SIA V(IG I2, II2/III2) Paraleipomena et Addenda.
Ed. Al. N. Oikonomides. (1984) SIA V. SIA V starts with the group of the most
important Attic graffiti inscriptions; the Ostraca-Ostracismi Atheniensium. SIA
V closes with the text from the volume Kerameikos III (Berlin, 1941), edited by
W. Peek including all the inscriptions, Graffiti inscriptions and Defixionum
Tabellae

SIA VIThe Latin Inscriptions of Athens and Attica
Ed by M. C. J. Miller (1992) For the first time, the Latin inscriptions
(including graffiti) of this region of Greece are collected in one volume. Many
major, hard-to-find articles on these inscriptions and a full concordance are
included.

The inscriptions from the Athenian Agora were published in the series
Athenian Agora, published by the American School of Classical Stidies at Athens.
The volumes are all available via JSTOR. Quite a few objects can be inspected
on line via the website agathe.gr.

A link to texts in PHI can be found PHI> ATTICA> REGIONAL AND SITE CORPORA.

XVI: Inscriptions: The Decrees - by
A. Geoffrey Woodhead (1997) Edited texts, with extensive
commentary, of some 344 fragments of Attic decrees dating from the mid-5th
century B.C. to A.D. 203, found in excavations of the Athenian Agora before
1967, with brief notes on additional material found up to 1975.

XVII: Inscriptions: The Funerary
Monuments - by Donald W. Bradeen, (1974). This volume presents the
funerary inscriptions found in the Athenian Agora between 1931 and 1968. In
addition, all Agora fragments of the public casualty lists known in 1971 have
been included, together with fragments associated with them but found
elsewhere, although the latter are not discussed in full.

XVIII: Inscriptions: The Dedicatory
Monuments - by Daniel J. Geagan, (2011). This volume contains
inscriptions on monuments commemorating events or victories, on statues or
other representations erected to honor individuals and deities, and on votive
offerings to divinities. Most are dated to between the 4th century B.C. and the
2nd century A.D., but a few survive from the Archaic and Late Roman periods. A
final section contains monuments that are potentially, but not certainly, dedicatory
in character, and a small number of grave markers omitted from Agora XVII. View it in a wordcat library: here: ( Only parts are available on-line for free)

XXI: Graffiti and Dipinti - by Mabel
Lang. (1976). Over 3,000 informal inscriptions
scratched or painted on pottery, lamps, or other clay fragments have been found
in the excavations of the Athenian Agora.

DAA - A. RaubitschekDedications from the Athenian Akropolis. A Catalogue of the Inscriptions of the Sixth and Fifth centuries B.C. With the collaboration of Lilian H. Jeffery. Cambridge (Mass.) 1949. Find this volume in a worldcat library, here. A link to texts in PHI can be found PHI> ATTICA> REGIONAL AND SITE CORPORA.

Συνοπτικός Κατάλογος των επιγραφών της Ακροπόλεως

Α. Μatthaiou and G.E. Malouchou have published here a concise catalogue of inscriptions kept on the Athenian Akropolis.

Kerameikos

The inscriptions of the German Kerameikos excavations were published by Werner Peek in 1974: Inschriften, Ostraka, Fluchtafeln. (Kerameikos: Ergebnisse der Augrabungen vol 3). An e-book edition is available from De Gruyter. A link to texts in PHI can be found PHI> ATTICA> REGIONAL AND SITE CORPORA.

Eleusis

A corpus of the inscriptions from Eleusis can be found in Clinton, Kevin. Eleusis, the Inscriptions on Stone: Documents of the Sanctuary of the Two Goddesses and Public Documents of the Deme. Athens: Archaeological Society at Athens, 2005. You can find it in a worldcat library here. A site with the photographs of the inscriptions can be found at: http://eleusis.library.cornell.edu/

AOL is a website designed to make available the inscriptions of ancient Athens and Attica in English translation, beginning in 2012 with the inscribed laws and decrees of Athens, 352/1-322/1 BC, of which new texts have recently been published as IG II31, 292-572. It has links to the original Greek texts (PHI) as well as geographical links to Pleiades.